Difference between revisions of "Robbing The Cradle"

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[[Category:1989 Releases]] [[Category:Category Romance]][[Category:Contemporary]]
 
[[Category:1989 Releases]] [[Category:Category Romance]][[Category:Contemporary]]
 
* '''Author''': [[Anne Henry]]
 
* '''Author''': [[Anne Henry]]
* '''Publisher''': [[American|Harlequin American Romance]], [[Harlequin American By The Numbers|# 292]]
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* '''Publisher''': [[American|Harlequin American Romance]] [[Harlequin American By The Numbers|# 292]]
 
* '''Year''': 1989
 
* '''Year''': 1989
 
* '''Setting''':  
 
* '''Setting''':  
* '''Amazon Listing''' - [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0373162928/ref=nosim/103-3685024-2000659?n=283155 Robbing The Cradle]
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* '''Amazon Listing''': [http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0373162928/ref=nosim/103-3685024-2000659?n=283155 Robbing The Cradle]
  
== About The Book ==
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== Book Description ==
 
Lots of women dated younger men.  Movie stars did it.  Singers and soap opera sirens did it.  But could Pamela Sullivan, a thirty-year-old Dallas caterer and mother of two small boys, do it?
 
Lots of women dated younger men.  Movie stars did it.  Singers and soap opera sirens did it.  But could Pamela Sullivan, a thirty-year-old Dallas caterer and mother of two small boys, do it?
  
 
Joel Bynum was "that nice young man at the supermarket."  A college kid, for heaven's sake.  His persistence flattered Pam.  His affection for her children went straight to her heart.  But Pam was too smart and too scared to throw caution to the winds, accept a date with Joel and blithely expect love to conquer all.
 
Joel Bynum was "that nice young man at the supermarket."  A college kid, for heaven's sake.  His persistence flattered Pam.  His affection for her children went straight to her heart.  But Pam was too smart and too scared to throw caution to the winds, accept a date with Joel and blithely expect love to conquer all.

Revision as of 16:59, 9 October 2007

Book Description

Lots of women dated younger men. Movie stars did it. Singers and soap opera sirens did it. But could Pamela Sullivan, a thirty-year-old Dallas caterer and mother of two small boys, do it?

Joel Bynum was "that nice young man at the supermarket." A college kid, for heaven's sake. His persistence flattered Pam. His affection for her children went straight to her heart. But Pam was too smart and too scared to throw caution to the winds, accept a date with Joel and blithely expect love to conquer all.